Commission sets the direction for prosperous livestock sector and a self-sufficient protein system

Today, the European Commission adopted the Livestock Strategy to ensure Europe's valuable livestock sector remains strong and resilient in the long term. The Strategy, the first of its kind, sets out actions to help livestock farmers address economic, environmental and market challenges. This long-term vision recognises the essential role of sustainable livestock farming in Europe's future to protect Europe's food security and support rural communities in all their diversity.  

The Livestock Strategy sets out the following five priorities:

  • A resilient livestock sector prepared for crisis. The Commission is stepping up preparedness to reduce risk exposure and enable farmers to recover more quickly after crisis. It will strengthen risk-management tools and explore a new scheme for insurance and re-insurance. It will also support Member States in managing the impact of animal diseases to strengthen prevention, early detection and early action. Investments into climate resilience and reducing import dependencies remain a key priority.
  • A competitive livestock sector - in the EU and globally. The Commission will work to boost profitability and uptake of innovation, and to bolster competitiveness and sustainability, so that the sector can thrive. In addition to the important role of the future EU budget, the Commission will explore how access to finance can facilitate the transition to cage-free systems and support permitting procedures, circularity, bioeconomy, and biomass valorisation. Furthermore, with fairness at the core of the Strategy, it will focus on fair income of farmers and ensuring international reciprocity. To deliver on this, the Commission will work on greater alignment of production standards, especially on animal welfare, in line with World Trade Organisation obligations. Efforts to promote new market opportunities through agri-food diplomacy will also be strengthened.
  • A sustainable livestock sector. Given the diversity of livestock farming across the regions, the Strategy will promote a tailored approach to address sustainability challenges. It proposes measures to improve animal welfare through targeted revisions for laying hens, broilers and pigs, which will be evidence-based and accompanied by adequate transition periods and financial support. Moreover, the EU will develop harmonised methods for calculating livestock emissions at farm level, climate mitigation practices, nutrient management, and sustainable circulation of resources. It will strengthen cooperation from farmers to producers and support sustainability and socio-economic goals in the sector.
  • A livestock sector fit for all farms and regions. The link between livestock farming and the territory is an essential one as livestock provides economic, environmental and social benefits in rural areas. The Commission will work with Member States on a plan to bring back sustainable livestock production to vulnerable regions, in particular those at risk of abandonment, with the support of a Land Observatory and supporting EU demography policies. The Livestock workstream will develop a roadmap for low-capacity and/or mobile slaughterhouses, contributing to fostering locally integrated livestock value chains, reducing animal transport and regenerating local economies.  
  • Excellence in livestock production. Quality is Europe's strategic asset. The Commission will make the EU's excellence in production more visible and rewarding through strengthened EU origin labelling and quality recognition. It will develop a European Excellence scheme to better valorise higher standards, sustainability, and specific production characteristics. In addition, it will promote sustainable EU livestock products through dedicated promotion policies, geographical indications, the Buy European campaign and organic production systems.

Addressing the pressures weighing on the sector is essential to ensure its resilient and sustainable future, attracting future generations of farmers. This means relying less on imported inputs and more on domestic and circular resources, and reducing emissions as set out in the Protein Action Plan and the Fertiliser Action Plan. At the same time, preserving food safety and improving animal welfare remain key objectives.  

The Livestock Strategy comes out with a Protein Action Plan. Together, these initiatives aim to reduce strategic dependencies, reinforce European food security and contribute to a stronger, more resilient and more strategic European agri-food system. The Protein Action Plan also aims to increase the supply and use of EU-grown protein.In 2025, only 25% of protein from oilseeds and protein crops were sourced in the EU. The Plan aims to increase the share to 35% by 2035. The Commission will support European protein crop production and improve the competitiveness of EU-grown proteins. By recognising the strong links between food, feed, energy and industrial value chains, it will also encourage innovation, investment, diversified diets and improved monitoring of protein dependencies.

Background

Livestock farming is a diverse and complex sector that accounts for about 40% of EU agricultural added value and generates €400 billion in annual turnover. It has a strong social and territorial impact, employing around 7 million people on 4 million farms spread across Europe, often in areas with few other economic opportunities. The sector provides high-quality protein and showcases European excellence worldwide, with some of the world's highest environmental, safety and quality standards.

Still, livestock farming is facing increasing challenges: low profitability and rising costs, changing market conditions, recurrent outbreaks of animal diseases as well as the emergence of new ones, societal expectations for higher standards of animal welfare and environmental challenges.

That is why the Commission announced in its Vision for Agriculture and Food that it would work on strengthening the competitiveness and resilience of the livestock sector. The Commission launched a workstream on livestock to develop policy pathways for targeted, territorial solutions for the sector's competitiveness and sustainability. The Livestock Strategy builds on extensive stakeholder engagement, framed by the livestock workstream, including more than one year of dialogue with Member States, farmers, industry representatives, and civil society, such as the European Board on Agriculture and Food.

The Vision also aims to strengthen Europe's protein system by making it more self-sufficient, sustainable and resilient.

For more information

Questions and answers

Factsheet

Webpage on Livestock Strategy

Animal health – Food Safety – European Commission

Animal welfare – Food Safety – European Commission

Webpage on Protein plants

Fertiliser Action Plan